




Altın GĂŒn â Garip
- Description
- Release details
- Tracklist
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Altın GĂŒn, the Grammy-nominated Turkish psych-groove quintet from Amsterdam, return with their sixth studio album Garip â their most ambitious and diverse release to date, and a heartfelt tribute to the legendary Turkish folk bard NeĆet ErtaĆ.
NeĆet ErtaĆ (1938â2012) was a beloved icon of Anatolian music; a gifted singer, lyricist, and baÄlama virtuoso who carried the spirit of the ashik folk tradition into the modern era. Garip ("Strange"in English) features ten of his compositions, each reimagined and richly expanded through Altın GĂŒnâs distinctive lens.
An electrifying live band with an ever-growing global following, Altın GĂŒn push their sonic boundaries even further on Garip â weaving in lush Arabesque string arrangements, bursts of saxophone, glimmering synth balladry, and a fresh surge of tightly wound rock ânâ roll.
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Since bursting onto the scene in 2018 with their debut album, On, Amsterdam-based Altın GĂŒn have been at the vanguard of the 21st century revival of Turkish-influenced psychedelic grooves.
Coming straight out of the gate with a wah-wah and organ heavy sound that effortlessly captured the spirit of Anatolian 70s psych-funk masters like BariĆ Manço and Erkin Koray, they deepened and expanded their palette with 2021âs Yol, which brought synths and drum machines into the mix for a more 80s-influenced dream-pop vibe.
But no matter how far out theyâve gone, theyâve always maintained a strong link to the same Anatolian folk traditions that inspired those early pioneers. Founder and bassist, Jasper Verhulst says: âWeâre doing the same thing a lot of those artists were doing, which is playing Turkish traditionals and songs written by folk artists.â
Now, with their sixth album, Garip, theyâve brought that connection to the folk source front and centre, showcasing a collection of songs all originally written by Turkish folk legend NeĆet ErtaĆ.
ErtaĆ (1938-2012) was a revered and much-loved Turkish singer, lyricist and baÄlama player, and a modern-day embodiment of the ancient ashik tradition of the folk-bard-troubadour. Throughout his long career, he recorded more than 30 albums and wrote hundreds of songs â some of which were famously recorded by the likes of BariĆ Manço and Selda BaÄcan.
For Altın GĂŒn's vocalist, keyboardist and baÄlama player, Erdinç Eçevit, interpreting a suite of ErtaĆâs tunes is a chance to get back to his roots.
âBoth of my parents are from Turkey, from the same area he is from,â he says. âIt's the music that I grew up with. When I was five, six years old, my grandfather always had cassettes by NeĆet ErtaĆ and I used to listen to it all day long. Then I was too young to really understand the lyrics and the meaning, but I really liked the melodies.
Now, years later, Eçevit has fully immersed himself in ErtaĆâs lyrics â messages from the heart that are, he says, âstories about what heâs facing in life. The Turkish traditional music is the blues of the Turkish people.â Nowhere is this better exemplified than on âGönul DaÄi,â one of ErtaĆâs most famous compositions, here brought to life by Eçevitâs yearning, sensitive vocals. ââGönul DaÄiâ is about the pain of love, the storms of the heart and the loneliness of longing,â says Eçevit. âHeâs expressing what rural Anatolia has always felt â that love is both sacred and sorrowful, a force of nature.â
In Altın GĂŒn's hands, the tune becomes a languid funk-rock crawl with watery guitar, a loping bassline and a palpable hint of mystery deepened by luxuriant string arrangements provided by the Stockholm Studio Orchestra. The strings feature on several tracks, touching on influences including Egyptian popular music, Bollywood soundtracks and Turkish Arabesque. But, as Verhulst explains, thereâs another touchstone underpinning the sound. âThereâs definitely a French Italian influence in those arrangements,â he says. It's a prime example of Altın GĂŒn's urge to cast their net wide and incorporate a far-reaching set of magpie musical directions.
Album opener, âNeredesin Sen,â is a throbbing, bass led vamp with a strong early-80s Indie flavour that showcases the fluid chemistry between drummer Daniel Smienk and percussionist Chris Bruining. The closing track, âBir Nazar Eyeldim,â is a breathtaking ballad with Eçevitâs pleading vocals playing out over lush synth arpeggios and a sparse electronic rhythm. Along the way, the band also touches on proggy vibes, with Eçevit getting down and dirty on the synthâs pitch-bend, and a laid-back west coast ambiance. Check out Thijs Elzingaâs gorgeous slide guitar on the smouldering âGel Kaçma Gelâ to dig just how relaxed they can sound.
Fans of Altın GĂŒn's past work will find much to love too. The Anatolian element is still strong â and not just in Eçevitâs aching vocals. Eçevitâs tight baÄlama figures are woven throughout, making a direct link back to those earliest influences on tracks like the smoky âNiÄde BaÄlari,â with its off-kilter folk rhythm and cavernous sense of the Anatolian steppes stretching out for miles.
âItâs our most eclectic album,â says Verhulst. âThereâs a little bit of everything. The songs are harder to label. We wanted to do something different than what weâve done before. Less in your face, less poppy, less obviously psych-rock. More just vibing.â
Garip is the sound of a band thatâs constantly evolving. A mature musical unit with nothing to prove. A band thatâs having a whole lot of fun.
Jasper Verhulst â bass
Erdinç Eçevit â vocals, baÄlama, keys
Daniel Smienk â drums
Chris Bruining â percussion
Thijs Elzinga â guitars
Genre: Pop & Rock
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Artist: Altın GĂŒnLabel: Glitterbeat, IndigoFormat: LPUnits: 1Country: EuropeGenre: Pop & RockStyle: Anatolian Rock, Folk Rock, Psychedelic Rock
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A1 Neredesin Sen
A2 GönĂŒl DaÄi
A3 ĂldĂŒrme Beni
A4 NiÄde BaÄlari
A5 Benim Yarim
B1 Suçum Nedir
B2 Gel Yanıma Gel
B3 ZĂŒlĂŒf DökĂŒlmĂŒĆ
B4 Gel Kaçma Gel
B5 Bir Nazar Eyledim
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Description
- Description
- Release details
- Tracklist
-
Altın GĂŒn, the Grammy-nominated Turkish psych-groove quintet from Amsterdam, return with their sixth studio album Garip â their most ambitious and diverse release to date, and a heartfelt tribute to the legendary Turkish folk bard NeĆet ErtaĆ.
NeĆet ErtaĆ (1938â2012) was a beloved icon of Anatolian music; a gifted singer, lyricist, and baÄlama virtuoso who carried the spirit of the ashik folk tradition into the modern era. Garip ("Strange"in English) features ten of his compositions, each reimagined and richly expanded through Altın GĂŒnâs distinctive lens.
An electrifying live band with an ever-growing global following, Altın GĂŒn push their sonic boundaries even further on Garip â weaving in lush Arabesque string arrangements, bursts of saxophone, glimmering synth balladry, and a fresh surge of tightly wound rock ânâ roll.
-----------------------------------
Since bursting onto the scene in 2018 with their debut album, On, Amsterdam-based Altın GĂŒn have been at the vanguard of the 21st century revival of Turkish-influenced psychedelic grooves.
Coming straight out of the gate with a wah-wah and organ heavy sound that effortlessly captured the spirit of Anatolian 70s psych-funk masters like BariĆ Manço and Erkin Koray, they deepened and expanded their palette with 2021âs Yol, which brought synths and drum machines into the mix for a more 80s-influenced dream-pop vibe.
But no matter how far out theyâve gone, theyâve always maintained a strong link to the same Anatolian folk traditions that inspired those early pioneers. Founder and bassist, Jasper Verhulst says: âWeâre doing the same thing a lot of those artists were doing, which is playing Turkish traditionals and songs written by folk artists.â
Now, with their sixth album, Garip, theyâve brought that connection to the folk source front and centre, showcasing a collection of songs all originally written by Turkish folk legend NeĆet ErtaĆ.
ErtaĆ (1938-2012) was a revered and much-loved Turkish singer, lyricist and baÄlama player, and a modern-day embodiment of the ancient ashik tradition of the folk-bard-troubadour. Throughout his long career, he recorded more than 30 albums and wrote hundreds of songs â some of which were famously recorded by the likes of BariĆ Manço and Selda BaÄcan.
For Altın GĂŒn's vocalist, keyboardist and baÄlama player, Erdinç Eçevit, interpreting a suite of ErtaĆâs tunes is a chance to get back to his roots.
âBoth of my parents are from Turkey, from the same area he is from,â he says. âIt's the music that I grew up with. When I was five, six years old, my grandfather always had cassettes by NeĆet ErtaĆ and I used to listen to it all day long. Then I was too young to really understand the lyrics and the meaning, but I really liked the melodies.
Now, years later, Eçevit has fully immersed himself in ErtaĆâs lyrics â messages from the heart that are, he says, âstories about what heâs facing in life. The Turkish traditional music is the blues of the Turkish people.â Nowhere is this better exemplified than on âGönul DaÄi,â one of ErtaĆâs most famous compositions, here brought to life by Eçevitâs yearning, sensitive vocals. ââGönul DaÄiâ is about the pain of love, the storms of the heart and the loneliness of longing,â says Eçevit. âHeâs expressing what rural Anatolia has always felt â that love is both sacred and sorrowful, a force of nature.â
In Altın GĂŒn's hands, the tune becomes a languid funk-rock crawl with watery guitar, a loping bassline and a palpable hint of mystery deepened by luxuriant string arrangements provided by the Stockholm Studio Orchestra. The strings feature on several tracks, touching on influences including Egyptian popular music, Bollywood soundtracks and Turkish Arabesque. But, as Verhulst explains, thereâs another touchstone underpinning the sound. âThereâs definitely a French Italian influence in those arrangements,â he says. It's a prime example of Altın GĂŒn's urge to cast their net wide and incorporate a far-reaching set of magpie musical directions.
Album opener, âNeredesin Sen,â is a throbbing, bass led vamp with a strong early-80s Indie flavour that showcases the fluid chemistry between drummer Daniel Smienk and percussionist Chris Bruining. The closing track, âBir Nazar Eyeldim,â is a breathtaking ballad with Eçevitâs pleading vocals playing out over lush synth arpeggios and a sparse electronic rhythm. Along the way, the band also touches on proggy vibes, with Eçevit getting down and dirty on the synthâs pitch-bend, and a laid-back west coast ambiance. Check out Thijs Elzingaâs gorgeous slide guitar on the smouldering âGel Kaçma Gelâ to dig just how relaxed they can sound.
Fans of Altın GĂŒn's past work will find much to love too. The Anatolian element is still strong â and not just in Eçevitâs aching vocals. Eçevitâs tight baÄlama figures are woven throughout, making a direct link back to those earliest influences on tracks like the smoky âNiÄde BaÄlari,â with its off-kilter folk rhythm and cavernous sense of the Anatolian steppes stretching out for miles.
âItâs our most eclectic album,â says Verhulst. âThereâs a little bit of everything. The songs are harder to label. We wanted to do something different than what weâve done before. Less in your face, less poppy, less obviously psych-rock. More just vibing.â
Garip is the sound of a band thatâs constantly evolving. A mature musical unit with nothing to prove. A band thatâs having a whole lot of fun.
Jasper Verhulst â bass
Erdinç Eçevit â vocals, baÄlama, keys
Daniel Smienk â drums
Chris Bruining â percussion
Thijs Elzinga â guitars
Genre: Pop & Rock
-
Artist: Altın GĂŒnLabel: Glitterbeat, IndigoFormat: LPUnits: 1Country: EuropeGenre: Pop & RockStyle: Anatolian Rock, Folk Rock, Psychedelic Rock
-
A1 Neredesin Sen
A2 GönĂŒl DaÄi
A3 ĂldĂŒrme Beni
A4 NiÄde BaÄlari
A5 Benim Yarim
B1 Suçum Nedir
B2 Gel Yanıma Gel
B3 ZĂŒlĂŒf DökĂŒlmĂŒĆ
B4 Gel Kaçma Gel
B5 Bir Nazar Eyledim




















